Lake Scugog Historical Society Historic Digital Newspaper Collection

Port Perry Star (1907-), 14 Jan 1937, p. 6

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" and gamblers, he bets $1. "put out of the game. TEA + SRA ASAE ALIANT LI CR NER is delicious ------ I - -- ----- - 1) Through an error on the part of the printer, the price in the Salada Green Tea Advertisement which appeared recently in this paper was shown as 38¢ per half Ib. instead of 30c per half Ib. J 4 [6] PLO OO VC ONIN 0107016070101 01010 0 0 0 000 2 % 3 Kg ° Wi DX) v, 9 * I< 4 3 : & KS ' 3 DOO OEOTRN BOO RIESE III SR IRR RI RA TIA Synopsis of Preceding Instalments: | the warning would start the police ..For ten years Pop Clark has tried vainly to win the United League pen- nant with his New York Blues. Most of the baseball writers predict an- other failure but Terry Burke of the Star thinks they have a chance and through Tony Murallo, who has a restaurant in the Broadway d'strict and is associated with bookmakers on them at 200 to 1. The opening game is a pitchers' battle. Whitpur, the Phila. delphia star, twirler. is jealous of Larry Doyle, the Blues®' rookie short- stop, because ot Pop Clark's pretty daughter Frances. He tries to in- timidate Larry with a bean ball and when he throws a second one at Lar- ry's head Doyle knocks him down with a right to the chin. Larry is Later Whit- per hits a home run with a man on base but as Whitper is nearing the home plate, he drops dead. shot through the heart. The Blues win and it is generally believed that Whitper was killed to allow them to win. Detective Kelly suspects Larry because he will not account foi his time atter leaving the diamond. Terry went on his way quietly and considerably awed. 'All through the . excitement of days spent with the police of both New York-and Boston, he kept his fear and his dread to himself. He never mentioned the warning he had received . from the killers of Sid Stream. Terry was afraid, and that was his sole reason for keeping his secret. It was not that he mistrusted the power of the police, but that he feared the power of his unknown enemies more. Terry did not believe in the wide publicity given to crime and criminals, He hon: estly believed that Sid Stream wou'd have been alive and probably = in prison if-the news had been kept out of the papers. On the other hand, it was news, and he was a reporter and as such he had to bend all his efforts i wre to secure news or lose his job. His own secret belonged' to him and at times it was a temptation to publish the warning he had received. He could see a big head across all the papers saying: YOUNG REPORTER'S LIFE THREATENED «< He knew that the publication of on a new wild-goose chase. It world put him in the foreground once more and draw more attention to him than he "esired, Strange men and.strange cars pulling up close to him made him jumpy... His nerves were on edge con stantly, because he never knew when h- out of the dark. In all hit storie. and interviews about the Boston affair, he was most careful to disclaim any actual knowl- edge of the crime or theories about tl © gang who might have heen oper ating against the Boston Indians. He emphasized the element of luck whi h made { possible (or hir to help the Boston police. He wasn't being med est at all: he was being as careful as he knew how under the circum- stances. He found life well worth living and had no desire to finish it There was a girl,-of course, Alice Andrews, who figured in his plans and he confided in her as is the way of man in love. She was terrific' and begged "Im to give up his work on the paper. He, of course, would not listen to any such proposition and made her promise that she would not reveal his 8 cret except after his sudden death. ~~ ies In writing about baseball in connec: tion with the tragedy, Terry did not say any of the things that the other papers were saying. He let all the suppositions come from the other men eas-and theories about the racketeers getting into the national game. At the end of two weeks every sports writer in the country was convinced that for some unknown reason the Blues were being pushed foward the pennant by a band of crooks. There were one or two writers, people like Mullins, who suggested in a veiled way that Pop Clark himself might have something to do with it, These indirect allusions brouhgt the discus- sion out into the open and caused a storm of protest from fans all over the country. Pop Clark -was above any such tactics, He had been for too long the most picturesque figure in the realm of the national sport to stoop to murder to win. The czar of baseball made a statement which was printed on the front page of all the leading newspapers. It read in part: "It is unfortunate that the sensa- might be the recipient of a tliat who filled 'their columns daily with id- | 300 Years Ago The London Observer writes:-- A young woman who "remembers how she lived and died 80 years agqQ" is now-drawing thousands to her home in Gydnia, the Polish port on the Baltic Sea, She is Maria Sznablowan, the niece of a chemist. Some days ago she went with her relatives for a walk to Oksywia, the Polish military port. Passing the old church and cemetery, she suddenly went very white and, exclaiming "here I was buried," dropped down to the ground. When she came to herself she told a strange story of reincarnation,' "I remember this place very well" she said. "I was buried here before I was the wife of a fisherman then. My name was Golosz," She went on to relate that her husband was killed in the Swedish war with Poland in the 17th century, that almost the whole population perished, and that she with her two children - went fishing and were drowned and afterwards buried in the Oksywia cemetery. ' The woman has never been known as a dreamer. The details she gives about the war are correct. She goes about her daily work as usual, but her story has brought crowds to her house. Doctors state that her health is perfect. / A barometer which can be carried in the pocket or in a handbag has been invented. It will be a great conveniénce to persons whose week- ends are spent rambling or other wise out of doors, The little weather prophet is ncatly encased and the sensitive needle which tells = the weather conditions has a wee duck at one end and a t'ny butterfly at the opposite end. When rain is ex- pected -the duck travels towards a pond, and when a fine day is to be expected, the butterfly moves to- wards some tiny flowers, both of which are pa'nted inside the case "The autos' make roads and roads | make commerce and civilization." --Henry Ford. tion-seeking press should stoop 89 low in their efforts to ple2se the jaded appetities of the public. The baseball world knows the sterling character of the man thus attacked an: no one who is a.true lover of sport can countenance for a moment the damnable innuendos -of the past few days." - In spite of the statement, the no lice were bothersome for a time Kel ly investigated the Blues, the mem bers of the tear were watched, and Fop +s shamed and annoyed con stantly.. Doyle's story. was rehash ou anf the figh in Tony's was brought * the front again. T:e murder of Whitper and Boston accident were credited the "to tzangdom; and after. three-weeks the police had nothing new to offer. Stream was a,gangster, that> was well kne y+ whe killed him was as much of, a puzzle as why he had caused the wreck in Boston. Dur 1g the three weeks that fol lowed the Boston tragedy, baseba'l in the United Le.gue was a very skittish affair indead. The quality of the play from cvery team around the cir was decidedly mediocre. The mi rvou; tens.on each team labored un- der was reflected by their actions on y field, " X One thing was certain, however. despite the condition in the league itself. The increase in attendance was terrific. The fans were turning out in surprising. numbers for- the mid-week games and over the week: end nearly every ball club around the cire-it played to capacity crowds. , And those morbid curiosity-seekers sensing that the = Blues in some strange way seemed to be the instru. ment "or fearful and nameless trag: edy, fought to ge' into the Blues' Park every time they played a game at the home grounds. (To be Continued.) numbers in the blan Help the Magician put up the magic spaces and wina "PRO © Act quickly snd win eur 2 ere Is besides the 7 FOR $1,000.00 EXTRA MPTNESS CNtysler Bedan, 100 M ADDRESS EL LLL EL RL ELE LL ELL EEL LO LE ELC IT TS LIT) y prizes. 18 may look unbelievable and W 1s tree, Answer mow, Bend me ney, Ja mall eonplu.; y below, Asse CHRYSLER SEDAN OR $2,000.00 IN CASH Find the magic figures and qualify for this opportunity, Certaln numbers from 1 to 9 which, If filled in the blank spaces, will add up 18 in any direction, When you find them, write the numbers in the blank spaceg and send the square to me right away together with your name and address filled in the coupon 6036 8t. Andre Bt, P, O. Station R., Box 130, IMPORTED PRODUCTS AGENCY REG'D, | \ "Montreal, PQ. NAME RRR RL LA LLL LLAMAS EAS =F ald TOWN suvvavsennasvovsstonsssnnrnins PROV. nny Wag - "Vv K Ay CELL) v4 J SAN I a Home A FLUFFY CAKE At this season of the' year, every- one is just a little tired of the rich- ness of holiday food. What je left of the Christmas cake can be care- fully stored and used at another date, but now is the time to serve something a. little less heavy and sweet. - A light, fluffy, sponge cake is just' the thing. 'For the bridge, tea, for Sunday night suppers with ice cream or for practically any oc- casion, this cake: will be a credit to the hostess and a joy to the guests. Sponge cakes. depend :on air . for their. fluffy, light perfection. The air may be beaten into the egg whites or yolks, or sifted into the flour and held there by the light, deft folding of the ingredients, Of course, the ingredients must be the finest and particularly the flour. Specially milled, soft winter wheat which has been sifted and re-sifted till it is as fine as the millers can make it, is the first step towards cake successes. A sponge cake is not necessarily expensive.. Even if only one or two eggs are used--it can taste like a luxury cake when made wtih the right kind of flour. ORANGE CAKE (PP. 20--Latest Cake Secrets) 14 cups sifted cake flour. 1's teaspoons baking powder. 14 teaspoon salt. 1 cup sugar, 1 tablespoon grated orange rind. 2 eggs and 1 egg yolk. 14 cup orange juice... 4 cup water. ' Sift flour once, measure. add bak. ing powder and salt, and- sift to. sether three times. Add % cup sugar and orange rind to eggs. and beat. with rotar., egg necator unti thick and lemon-colored; add re. maining sugar gradually, beating very thoroughly; then orange juice and water. Add flour. gradually. beating with rotary egg beat~r until smooth Turn into greased tube pan and bake in moderate cven (350 D. [.) 55 minutes. or until done. Re move f{rom- oven and invert pan one hour or unt'l ea'd. EMLRGENCY SHELF Homeanade pickles and preserves ives, "canned fruits, meats, savps wind fish go a long way '+ helping the voman whe has to entertarn be eady and able fo mdet" emeérgencies -asi'ly and gracioushy The popular tome is always the one in which the quests do not feel they are Misrupt ing the entire household by their wresence, the one in "which every- thing appears to run easily and with: wt effort, i The modern emergency she'f is lifferent from that of our muther's because it is not a supply of seldom. used provisions for special acévasions ly Although it may include a fow specials, it is. for- the most part, simply a generous supply of the semi-perishable staples which are By LAURA KNIGHT Jrunes Hints always on hand for family use, In order t help your meals on body needs, you will find it well worth your while to: follow: these recipes and use them often: BARBECUED BEEF steak or braising beef (three-quart- ers of an inch thick); salt and pepper and flour, : Method: Pound- the meat thor- oughly with a wooden beater. Rub with salt and pepper and flour well on. both sides. Brown quickly on both sides -in a small amount of shortening. Add following sauce: Sauce: One and one-half cups hot water, 1 tablespoon butter, 3% 'tea- spoon tobasco sauce, % cup tomato catsup, 1 tablespoon Worcestershire Sauce, 1 lemon, juice. Method: Bring to a boil and pour over the meat. Cover closely and cook slowly over fire for two hours Garnish with slices of sour pickle and lightly sauted green pepper slices. MUTTON ROWLETTE One and a half slice mutton (fore quarter), mustard, 2 cups of bread crumbs, 14 cup butter or drippings 2-3 cup hot water, 1 teaspoon poultry seasoning, 1 teaspoon salt, 3% tea: spoon pepper. Method: Rub meat with mustard salt and pepper to taste. Prepare a dressing of the remaining ingrzdi ents and 'place over the meat Rol! meat and dressing and tie or skewe: fast. , Sprinkle with salt and peppo and dredge with flour. Brown all over in hot shortening. Make a brown gravy by adding two table spoons of flour and two, cups hot water Pour over meat roll and: simmer on top of stove or in a mod. erate oven, 850 degrees F.,, until very tender--about three hours. ORANGE PRJUME SALAD 18-24 prunes, cooked, 1 pkg. cream cheese, 1 tablespoon nuts, chopped, 2 tablespoons top milk, salt and pa- ~rika, 2 oranges. : _ Mdthod: Remove stones from the Arrange attractively on a lettuce 'eaf with slices or sections of orange. Serve with a tasty French dressing. Garnish with panrika and serve icy cold. BAKED BEAN CROQUETTES Two cups baked beans, salt and senper minced onion, Method: Drain and mash. beans in. '0 a smooth paste. Season with salt. iepper, onion. Shape into cutlets or 'roquettes, dip in beaten egg and crumbs and deep fry in shortening at 380 D. F. Serve with tomato ca% sup. oy be Serve croquettes with a baked po- teto. A crisp green salad will com. plete the meal. A note of warning to businessmen who pull profits from prosperity is sounded by Roger W. Babson, econo- mist and 'statistician, in the Rotarian Magazine. "It is my way of thinking," he says, "advertising and selling are going to play a tremendous part in the coming boom. Your sales de- partment should be drilled into a 'prosperity psychology.' The minute the low point of a depression is teached, and the turn towards the better comes, I become bullish on ad- : vertising. This bullishness develops into a white heat as business reaches the normal line. It is'in the normal zone that all the constructive forces of your organization should work n harmony." Mr. Babson further urges that businessmen consider these import- ant factors: 'As prosperity proceeds there will be increasing shortages of skilled workers and executives; so investment in your personnel now WAKE UP YOUR LIVER BILE-- And You'll Jump Out of Bed in the Morning Rarin' to go The liver should gone out two pounds of liquid bile into your bowels daily, If this bile is not flowing freely, your food doesn't digest, 1t just decays in the bowels. Gas bloats up your stomach. You get constipated. Harmful poisons go into the body, and you feel sour, sunk and the world looks punk. A mere bowel movement doesn't al get at the cause, You need something that works . on the liver as well, It takes thode £ , old Carter's Little Liver Pills to get these two Jounds of bile flowing freely and make you eel "up and up", Harmless 'and gentle, the: make the bile flow freely, They do the wor! of calomel but have no calomel or mercury in £2 or_Carter's Little Liver Pills by - name Stubbornly refuse anything else, 25¢, Issue No. 3 -- '37 c--2 Advertising, Selling Methods B Play Big Part in Prosperity should pay handsome dividends. Do- ing business in the prosperous das ahcad without sound accounting and finance methods would be like fight- ing a fire with gasoline. If you must borrow, at least be free from debt one day of each year, Practical research in your business may mean the difference between profits ard just breaking even. : . "Strange as this may sound, less than 10 per cent of the businessmen 'of the United States actually pulled profits. from the great 1929 boom! Remember this:" Profit tickets are not passed out to all that enter the Big Tent of good times. pansion you must work just as hard to assure profits as in a period ot depression you n.ust work hard to avert losses. : "Only four times during my 35 years of studying business conditions has the Babson-chart, on which I've spent over a million dollars ig re- search, crossed the 'normal line' on its way upward. The first of these was in 1902-12, the second in 1915, and the third was 14 years ago, in 1922, The fourth has just occurred. "At the. start of this impending boom," he says in conclusion, "you all have a new set of books to open. This is the time when everybody starts from scratch but some--only scratch, The way to eliminate com- petition is not to meet it but to keep ahead of it." Uruguay is considering a large public-works program. "The manner in which the 'com- munity takes care of its sick and in- capacitated is the gauge hy. which the degree of civilization of a people may be judged" ¥ : ~TFannie_ Hurst, . their merry way to satisfying the | purse, the appetite, as well as the One and a half pounds of round | Mix cheese, nuts, salt, milk and seasonings and stuff the prunes. In a period of business ex-. If You're Told to "Alkalize" Try This Remarkable "Phillips" Way 3 On every side today le are hah any. thus ease symptoms of "acid indiges- tion," nausea #4 stomach upsets, 2 To gain quick ization, just do this: Fake two teaspoons o PHIL ~ LIPS' MILK OF MAGNESIA 30 utes after eating. OR -- take two Phillips' Milk of Magnesia. T'ablets, which have the same antacid effect, Relief comes almost at once -- usually in a few minutes. Nausea "gas" -- fullness after eating an "acid indigestion" pains leave. You feel like a new person. Try this way. You'll be surprised at results, Get either the liquid "Phil- lips" or the remarkable, new Phillips ilk of Magnesia Tablets. Delightful to take and easy to carry with you. Only 25¢ a box at all drug stores, * Al ALSO IN TABLET FORM: Each tiny tablet is the equiv. / alent of a teatnconial of uine Phillips' Milk of agnesia, Warm Drinking Water For Cows ---------- Necessary During The Colder Winter Weather : There are some very good reasons why the water offered cows should be varmed- during cold winter. wea- ther, even though the chill is not taken off for the rest of the stock. It has been proved time and again "that it is beneficial to the health of the herd besides increasing the milk: flow, . ; Very cold water taken into the stomach of the cow_ imparts a. chill to the digestive organs that retards 'their functioning-to a certain extent. It is cheaper to warm the drinking water with a tank heater than it is "y giving more feed even if the sys- tem of the cow would assimilate the greater amount of cold water and feed required to warm it. Water is ns essential as good feed and any- one must agree 'that it {is much cheaper. The cows that are compelled to drink from an ice-bound, exposed tank are subject to the. chill from both the cold water and the zero glaes, The watering tank- should at .least have a shelter over it as a protec tion agafust the wind. The freezing atmosphe e in itseli takes much of the appetite for water and a lot of the profit from the cream or milk cheque. ; BRITE ERE Where it ie. possible to have the indoor drinking tank, it has proven far better to water the cows inside tha barn. The cov with water handy at all tims will drink more and yet not drink so mud at any one time. The smaller amount of water, even though a liiile cold, does not shock the system nor retard digestion. Each cow sips a few cwallows occasional ly through the day-as she feels the need of it and eats more feed, One must not forget the value of regular salting of the milk cows in getting them to drink more water during the winter season. FINE FOR KIDNEY AND BLADDER WEAKNESS. STOP GETTING UP NIGHTS LOOK AND FEEL YOUNGER Keep your kidneys free from waste matter, poisons and acid, and put healthy activity into kidneys and bladder and you'll live a healthier, happier and. longer life. ! One most efficient and harmless way to do this is to get from. your druggist a 40-cent box of Gold Medal Haarlem Oil Capsules .and take them surprise you. 3 esides getting up nights, some symptoms of kidney trouble are backache, moist {Poims, leg cramps, and puffy eyes. you want real re- sults, be a to get GOLD MEDAL ~the original and genuine--a grand kidney, stimulant and diuretic--right from Haarlem in Holland, Give your kidneys a good cleaning once in a while. : ; _ag .directed--the swift results will edulous Their C WINNIPE i -- Three brides of Owen Sound, Ont., who came west in August, 1882, were recalled to Australia, while there - during her © | present trip around the world. It was in 1882 Mise Hind herself |arrived in Winnipeg from her grand- ~ | father's farm in Grey County, Ont., {to begin a notable career a pews- paperwoman and' agriculturist. times in contrast with latest fashi- ons of Adelaide's centenary year drew the Canadian writer's mind back -- wistfully perhaps -- to those pioneer days in the West. "It .was the lady of 60-odd y 3 ago which attracted my attention most," Miss Hind wrote to the Free Press, "garnet satin, ruffled and fril- led to the 'nth' degree, basque waist with endless gold and garnet buttons up the front, cream Spanish laces ruffles at nech and wrists, a long gold watch stuck into a tiny patch pocket on the basque, There were three brides in the old city of Owen Sound coming west in the August of 182, and any one of thre¢ might have furnished the dress for that window. Garnet satin was the cor- rect wear for brides that year and the more frills and puffs the better." That's 'all there is about the three Ontario brides who came into the West but Miss Hind's article indi- cates Australian young folk are just as incredulous about grandmother's clothes as their Canadian sisters: "Crowds gather round 'these win- dows and some of the comment is real fun, Two misses in their early 'teens--'gurely no one ever wore clothes like that?' 'Oh, yes; they did; don't you remember the old tin- type in the front of the album at grandmother's, her mother's wedding group, the bride was dressed just like that,' pointing to a figure array- ed in a voluminous creation of laven- der and white striped silk with black lace flounces. "] am sure the skirt was five yards wide if it was an inch; a deep yoke, poke bonnet tied beneath her chin, the face peeping out from ruf- fles of blond inset with tiny rosebuds and a 'fall' of lace thrown back over it and draping to the shoulders; white silk lace mittens. "The bridegroom in very tight buff -coloured trousers, strapped down orately flowered bright green, double- breasted cutaway coat with brass buttons and long tails behind; elab- orately "ruffled shirt front, high col- neckeloth swatched round the throat and tied'in a butterfly bow in front. On one arm a mighty silver-grey beaver hat with deeply rolled brim," Tici:Ale Girl's Skin May Need Some Attention Right Diet, Plenty of Exercise and Sleep Will Improve Any Complexion "When should my young daughter start to use beauty preparations?" "Since Galen invented cold cream about 160 A.D. mothers have been asking this question. The logical an swer seems to be: "As soon as she needs: them." - The 'teen age girl who has clear smooth skin certainly doesn't need blemish eradicators and rich creams, but regardless of her age, one whose complexion 's not all it should be ought to give it special 'attention. . ter's heretofore: clear skin begins to get rough and dry and pimply, don _ dismiss her case lightly with "well, all adolescent - girls havebad complex: jons."" In the first place, this isn't true. Secondly, since proper care will make her skin lovely once moie. why waste time being annoyingly philosophical 'meanwhile letting the child suffer mentally and worry her- self sick about the way she looks? and sleep and freedom from worry will improve any skin. See that your child adheres to all the health rules then teach her a simple routine to eliminate blackheads and minor ble mishes. [f her skin is dry, do let her have some good cold cream If it's oily, impress her with the importance of washing with soap and water three times a, day. / If you have laid a 'proper beauty foundation for her, she should. by the tima she is 18, have glossy. shiny hair, good posture, eyes that look vi: charming than the little girl who ex- embarrassment, firmly clasps hand that is offered to her by a stran- ger, over top boots, a buff waistcoat, elab-- If, at the age of 12, your daugh- .. A Ls a x . _ Ee 4 y 3 Sos : : Bi : Sie meniory by Miss Cora Hind, the Can- - |adian writer, in far-off Adelaide, Ye a al Fa '¢ y adn = Just now it is spring in Australia £ "§and a featuring of costumes o other lar points sticking out above yards of A The right diet, plenty of exercise tenda her right hand 'and, without the . a on 3 br. 3 8 sitors straight in the eyes and neat ly groo:.ed hands. Incidentally. don't forget to teach all of your children Wom! how to shake hands. Nothing is more =}

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